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In Brief

For the second time in past five months, a Brazil court ordered local telecommunications companies to block the popular messaging app WhatsApp for 72 hours, afterFacebook-owned WhatsApp company refused to hand over information requested in a drug trafficking investigation. The WhatsApp's shutdown is affecting more than 100 million users throughout the country. Moreover, if Brazilian telecommunications companies do not comply, they could face a fine of $143,000 per day.

Brazil just blocked its roughly 100 Million citizens from using WhatsApp, the popular messaging service owned by Facebook, for 72 hours (3 days).

A Brazilian Judge ordered the blackout after WhatsApp failed to comply with a court order asking the company to help a branch of civil police access WhatsApp data tied to a criminal investigation.

This is for the second time in last five months when a Brazil court ordered local telecommunications companies to block access to the popular messaging service across the country.

The ruling came into effect at 2 p.m. local time (1 p.m. ET), after which an estimated 91 percent of Brazilian mobile users nationwide could not be able to send or receive any messages on WhatsApp, Local newspaper Folha de S.Paulo reported.

Penalty of $142,000/Day for Not Complying

Moreover, if any service provider found violating the court order, it would subject to a penalty of $142,000 per day.

WhatsApp is very disappointed by the move, saying the decision "punishes more than 100 million users who depend upon us [WhatsApp] to communicate themselves, run their business and more, just to force us to hand over information that we do not have."

WhatsApp recently enabled complete End-to-End encryption for its text, image and voice messages, which means that even the company would not be able to access any message exchanged between users. This made matter even worse for the Brazilian police.

In December, a São Paulo state judge ordered the shutdown of WhatsApp across the country for 48 hours after Facebook failed to comply with a criminal investigation, although the court ruling was overturned by another court the next day.

The blackout comes courtesy of Judge Marcel Maia Montalvão of Sergipe state, the same judge who in March ordered the imprisonment of a Facebook executive for not turning over private data from a WhatsApp account tied to a drug trafficking investigation. He was jailed and subsequently released the next day.

Brazil’s federal police arrested Facebook Latin America Vice President for failing to comply with court orders to help investigators in a drug trafficking case that involves WhatsApp, a popular messaging app owned by Facebook that has over 100 Million users in Brazil.

Facebook VP Diego Jorge Dzodan was arrested on his way to work in São Paulo, Brazil today because the company refused to provide details of a WhatsApp user involved in organized crime and drug trafficking.

Dzodan is still in police custody and is responding to police questioning in Sao Paulo, Local media reported.

According to a statement released by a spokesperson from WhatsApp:

"We are disappointed that law enforcement took this extreme step. WhatsApp cannot provide information we do not have. We cooperated to the full extent of our ability in this case, and while we respect the important job of law enforcement, we strongly disagree with its decision."

In December 2015, the Brazilian court blocked WhatsApp messaging service temporarily for 24 hours in Brazil, after the company refused to hand over the content of communications between alleged drug dealers involved in the drug trafficking case.

...and the refusal now resulted in the arrest of Facebook VP.

At the time of WhatsApp blackout in Brazil, Facebook’s Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg said that he was stunned by the "extreme decision by a single judge to punish every person in Brazil who uses WhatsApp."

Today’s arrest of Facebook VP comes as a New York judge ruled that the United States government have no right to force Apple to unlock an iPhone involved in a drug case.